Gunmen attack luxury hotel in Tripoli, take hostages
Islamic State (IS) extremists have claimed responsibility for the attack on the Corinthia Hotel in the Libyan capital of Tripoli, the SITE Intelligence Group said Tuesday, Sputnik News reported.
Several gunmen have reportedly broken into a Tripoli luxury hotel after a car bomb blast outside the building, media report.
According to SITE, IS fighters dubbed the operation "Battle of Abu Anas al-Libi." Abu Anas Libi was an alleged al-Qaeda member suspected in the bombings of the US embassies in Tanzania and Kenya in 1998. He was captured by US forces in Tripoli in October 2013 and died in a US hospital earlier in January.
Eyetwitnesses report gunmen are holed up in the 20th floor of the Corinthia Hotel, have taken at least five hostages. According to local TV channel al-Nabaa, "senior officials" are inside the hotel. Reuters reports citing a security source that Prime Minister of the Tripoli Government Omar Hassi was also in the Corinthia hotel during the attack.
"Three gunmen who are believed to have carried out a car explosion in the car park of the Corinthia hotel have been trapped by our security forces," Reuters reports quoting security spokesman Essam Naas.
The confrontation began Tuesday morning after masked gunmen used a car bomb as a diversion and got into the hotel killing three guards. Three Filipino women were wounded by smashed window glass. Standoff continues.
Meanwhile, at least 18 people were killed and 44 others wounded in clashes in Libya’s second largest city of Benghazi, media report citing medical sources. According to the reports, the warplanes of Libyan army were also seen bombing the areas in Benghazi occupied by Islamists.
Libya's National Army has begun new assaults against armed islamist groups near the oil ports in the country's eastern region.
The clashes continue despite the peace talks started in Geneva which aimed at resolving the North African nation's political crisis.